List of Illustrations
Foreword, Laura F. Edwards
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Ex Parte Milligan at 150—The Constitution and Military Commissions in American Wars on Terror, Stewart L. Winger
Part 1. The Meaning of Martial Law
1. Benjamin F. Butler, Ex Parte Milligan, and the Unending Civil War, Brian Matthew Jordan
2. Martial Law and the Expansion of Civil Liberties during the Civil War, Jonathan W. White
3. The Janus-Faced Character of Martial Law in the American Civil War, or the Strange Case of Lieutenant Alanson L. Sanborn and Dr. David M. Wright, Mark S. Schantz
Part 2. The Copperheads of the Middle West
4. Race, Class, and Copperheadism: The Localist Foundations of Dissent in the Civil War’s Middle Border, Christopher Phillips
5. “The State Was Honeycombed with Secret Societies”: Governor Oliver P. Morton and the Copperheads in Indiana, A. James Fuller
6. “These Scoundrels Stand in No Fear of the Civil Courts: They Do, of the Military”: The Decision to Use Military Commissions to Try the Indiana Conspirators in 1864, Stephen E. Towne
Part 3. The Milligan Decision
7. Ex Parte Milligan in Context and History: David Davis and the Constitutional Politics and Law of Civil Liberty, Michael Les Benedict
8. To Leave Behind the Law of Force: Salmon Chase and the Civil War Era, Michael Haggerty
9. The Least Naive Position: The Lincoln Administration and International Law in American Wars on Terror, Stewart L. Winger
Part 4. The Precedential Power of Milligan
10. Ex Parte Milligan in the State Courts: Madison Y. Johnson’s Vindication in Illinois, John A. Lupton
11. Ex Parte Milligan in Context and History: From Reconstruction to the War on Terror, Michael Les Benedict
12. Ex Parte Milligan and the War on Terrorism: Testing the Constitutional Bedrock of a Civilian Criminal Trial, Jonathan Hafetz
List of Contributors
Index